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Car pools may solve parking problem
In Brief________________________________
Cal moves start time of Saturday’s game for television, again
The starting time for the USC-California football game in Berkeley this Saturday has been changed — again.
The new game time is 3:30 p.m., said an official in the university athletic department.
Originally, the game was scheduled for 12:30 p.m., but was moved by Cal athletic officials to 7:30 p.m., when it was thought that ESPN would pick up the game for national broadcast.
The same officials announced Monday that the game will now be broadcast live on Prime Ticket. That announcement prompted the latest change in game time.
ABC-TV had the option of picking up the game for either national or regional coverage, but decided instead to broadcast the UCLA-Arizona game from Tuscon.
The Trojans will be back on TV the following week when they play Notre Dame at South Bend, Ind.
That game will be on CBS-TV.
— From campus news services
ndex
Viowpointii.«it..).«..ti.t...iiii....i).i.i(iaa. 4
Komix............................... 6
Arts & Entertainment................ 9
Sports............................ 24
Officials must offer incentives to entice people to ride-share
By Julie Chen
Staff Writer
Enforced car pools may be the only solution to the campus parking problem, a university official said Monday.
"We are a university with limited land. Something's got to give," said Peter Gordon, associate dean of urban and regional planning.
The planning department, which is responsible for drafting parking plans, should "come up with ways to tease people into car-pooling, either through preferential or lower rates or whatever it takes," he said.
"L.A. being L.A., and all other things
considered, (parking) will always be a problem. There's no 'quickie' way out. I'm not optimistic you can do a lot," Gordon said.
However, Richard McCormick, a parking operations administrator, said, "at the present time we have enough to take care of everyone with a parking permit."
The problem lies with faculty members who claim that available parking is too far from the campus buildings to which they want to go, McCormick said.
"Everyday there are about 300 to 400 empty spaces in Menlo," discounting the first few days of school, he said.
The three Menlo lots, which hold roughly 1,500 to 1,600 spaces, are only one and a half blocks from campus. Trams that take students from the Menlo lots to campus run frequently in the mornings.
Faculty members may request reserved
parking spaces, which cost $62.70 a month and may require being wait-listed until a spot is available.
Assured parking permits, which cost $41.60 a month, allow faculty members to park in designated lots.
Regular parking, which costs $29.70 a month, allows parking in any available space on campus.
To build a new parking structure would cost about $10,000 per space, McCormick said. An average structure contains 1,000 spaces, he said.
"If the university said, 'We're going to build another parking structure,' I'd say, 'Great,' but it's probably not necessary," McCormick said.
Even on weekends when football games at the Coliseum bring increased traffic to the area, he said, only students with resident off-campus permits should (See Parking, page 16)
No incentives
Local black students turn to black universities, not USC
By Kristine Kennedy
Staff Writer
Many local black high school students are turning to all-black colleges to fulfill needs they think would not be met by the university.
"They'd rather go to prestigious black colleges where they get support," said Lawanda Hawkins, a senior at George Washington High School, five miles south of the university.
''Those colleges try to get you through to graduate school, whereas
This Is the second in a three-part series on USC’s relations with local black high school students.
USC tries to screen you out the first year," Hawkins said. "And I've even heard that from adults at USC."
The "screening out" process includes a lack of financial, academic and emotional support for black students once they arrive at the university.
Ben Bailey, a junior and double major in biomedical and electrical engineering, has had first-hand experience with the differences between an allblack college and the university.
Originally from Connecticut, Bailey attended the university his freshman year. Through a university-sponsored program, Bailey spent his sophomore year at Howard University in Washington, D.C. He agrees with Hawkins.
"You have to work to get through Howard. There are privileges with be-(See Students, page 8)
Italians revealed in sketch exhibit
A & E, page 9
Car Classics
Hardlp Singh / Dally Trojan
A Mercedes Benz with plenty of Trojan spirit — license plate, frame and window shade — sits in parking lot
Volume CX, Number 26
University of Southern California
Tuesday, October 10,1989
For a Pell Grant, students pledge not to use drugs
New rule means offenders could lose federal funding
By Bob Elston
Staff Writer
As part of the first group of Pell Grant recipients to be affected by a new federal law, 3,070 university students stand to lose their aid if they are caught using or selling narcotics.
The pledge, included among a series of promises that accompany the Pell Grant application, must be signed by all students who intend to receive this form of federal assistance to pay their university expenses.
"If a student doesn't check the box and sign it, we send it back," said Jim Tilton, assistant director of financial aid programs. "We follow the letter of the law when dispersing Pell Grants."
This condition is new to the Pell Grant this year. In order to receive the federal funds, students must promise not to "engage in unlawful manufacture, distribution, dispersion, possession or use of a controlled substance" during the term of the financial aid.
"To decide who should and should not receive federal aid is within the purview of the federal government," said Tom King, associate dean of systems in the Admissions, Financial Aid, Registration and Records office.
(See Grants, page 7)
A Jackson of many trades
Sports, page 24
weather
82/58
Sunny.

Car pools may solve parking problem
In Brief________________________________
Cal moves start time of Saturday’s game for television, again
The starting time for the USC-California football game in Berkeley this Saturday has been changed — again.
The new game time is 3:30 p.m., said an official in the university athletic department.
Originally, the game was scheduled for 12:30 p.m., but was moved by Cal athletic officials to 7:30 p.m., when it was thought that ESPN would pick up the game for national broadcast.
The same officials announced Monday that the game will now be broadcast live on Prime Ticket. That announcement prompted the latest change in game time.
ABC-TV had the option of picking up the game for either national or regional coverage, but decided instead to broadcast the UCLA-Arizona game from Tuscon.
The Trojans will be back on TV the following week when they play Notre Dame at South Bend, Ind.
That game will be on CBS-TV.
— From campus news services
ndex
Viowpointii.«it..).«..ti.t...iiii....i).i.i(iaa. 4
Komix............................... 6
Arts & Entertainment................ 9
Sports............................ 24
Officials must offer incentives to entice people to ride-share
By Julie Chen
Staff Writer
Enforced car pools may be the only solution to the campus parking problem, a university official said Monday.
"We are a university with limited land. Something's got to give," said Peter Gordon, associate dean of urban and regional planning.
The planning department, which is responsible for drafting parking plans, should "come up with ways to tease people into car-pooling, either through preferential or lower rates or whatever it takes," he said.
"L.A. being L.A., and all other things
considered, (parking) will always be a problem. There's no 'quickie' way out. I'm not optimistic you can do a lot," Gordon said.
However, Richard McCormick, a parking operations administrator, said, "at the present time we have enough to take care of everyone with a parking permit."
The problem lies with faculty members who claim that available parking is too far from the campus buildings to which they want to go, McCormick said.
"Everyday there are about 300 to 400 empty spaces in Menlo," discounting the first few days of school, he said.
The three Menlo lots, which hold roughly 1,500 to 1,600 spaces, are only one and a half blocks from campus. Trams that take students from the Menlo lots to campus run frequently in the mornings.
Faculty members may request reserved
parking spaces, which cost $62.70 a month and may require being wait-listed until a spot is available.
Assured parking permits, which cost $41.60 a month, allow faculty members to park in designated lots.
Regular parking, which costs $29.70 a month, allows parking in any available space on campus.
To build a new parking structure would cost about $10,000 per space, McCormick said. An average structure contains 1,000 spaces, he said.
"If the university said, 'We're going to build another parking structure,' I'd say, 'Great,' but it's probably not necessary," McCormick said.
Even on weekends when football games at the Coliseum bring increased traffic to the area, he said, only students with resident off-campus permits should (See Parking, page 16)
No incentives
Local black students turn to black universities, not USC
By Kristine Kennedy
Staff Writer
Many local black high school students are turning to all-black colleges to fulfill needs they think would not be met by the university.
"They'd rather go to prestigious black colleges where they get support," said Lawanda Hawkins, a senior at George Washington High School, five miles south of the university.
''Those colleges try to get you through to graduate school, whereas
This Is the second in a three-part series on USC’s relations with local black high school students.
USC tries to screen you out the first year," Hawkins said. "And I've even heard that from adults at USC."
The "screening out" process includes a lack of financial, academic and emotional support for black students once they arrive at the university.
Ben Bailey, a junior and double major in biomedical and electrical engineering, has had first-hand experience with the differences between an allblack college and the university.
Originally from Connecticut, Bailey attended the university his freshman year. Through a university-sponsored program, Bailey spent his sophomore year at Howard University in Washington, D.C. He agrees with Hawkins.
"You have to work to get through Howard. There are privileges with be-(See Students, page 8)
Italians revealed in sketch exhibit
A & E, page 9
Car Classics
Hardlp Singh / Dally Trojan
A Mercedes Benz with plenty of Trojan spirit — license plate, frame and window shade — sits in parking lot
Volume CX, Number 26
University of Southern California
Tuesday, October 10,1989
For a Pell Grant, students pledge not to use drugs
New rule means offenders could lose federal funding
By Bob Elston
Staff Writer
As part of the first group of Pell Grant recipients to be affected by a new federal law, 3,070 university students stand to lose their aid if they are caught using or selling narcotics.
The pledge, included among a series of promises that accompany the Pell Grant application, must be signed by all students who intend to receive this form of federal assistance to pay their university expenses.
"If a student doesn't check the box and sign it, we send it back," said Jim Tilton, assistant director of financial aid programs. "We follow the letter of the law when dispersing Pell Grants."
This condition is new to the Pell Grant this year. In order to receive the federal funds, students must promise not to "engage in unlawful manufacture, distribution, dispersion, possession or use of a controlled substance" during the term of the financial aid.
"To decide who should and should not receive federal aid is within the purview of the federal government," said Tom King, associate dean of systems in the Admissions, Financial Aid, Registration and Records office.
(See Grants, page 7)
A Jackson of many trades
Sports, page 24
weather
82/58
Sunny.